Israel's Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says that the United Nations report on Iran's
nuclear program only documents what can be proven, but in reality the terrorist
sponsoring nation is far closer to having a nuclear bomb than the report
confirms. Reuters reports that Netanyahu said, "Iran is closer to getting an
(atomic) bomb than is thought. Only things that could be proven were written (in
the report), but in reality there are many other things that we see." The UN
report has went further than any other in the past decade to confirm that Iran
is indeed weaponizing its nuclear program. These are facts that the US and
Israel have known for years, but have only been revealed by the UN since a
change in leadership.
In 2009,
Japan's Yukiya Amano was elected to serve as the head of the UN's International
Atomic Energy Agency. He replaced Islamist Mohamed El Baradei, who was
considered soft on Iran's nuclear development, often emphatically denying that
Iran was developing a weapons system, despite intelligence contrary to his
position. Amano won the IAEA position over another Islamist, Abdul Samad Minty
from South Africa. Minty was positioned to challenge the US and other nuclear
powers to disarm. Minty was supported by Arab states. The Jerusalem Post
reported in July 2009 that Israel was relieved that Minty did not win the
position.
The Post said
that Israeli officials thought Minty's relationship with Iran was too cozy.
South Africa, where Minty is from, supported Iran because of historical and
business relationships, which included Iran providing cheap oil. Under Minty's
guidance, South Africa abstained from confirming the 2006 IAEA report on Iran,
siding with Islamic nations and Iran by withholding its vote. MSNBC reported in
March 2009 that "Support for Amano from the US, Canada, the European Union and
others was to an extent less because he was the ideal candidate and more
"because of fears that Minty would become a second El Baradei.""
It is no
coincidence that the recent report on Iranian nukes by the UN's nuclear watchdog
had more of the truth in it than El Baradei would have allowed. But according to
the Israeli Prime Minister, it still doesn't disclose all that Israeli
intelligence knows. An Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities could have
Biblical impact. On one hand, it could devastate Iran's nuclear intentions. On
the other hand it could invite counter strikes from Iran or Iran's vassal state,
Syria, just North of Israel. A very important end time prophecy is found in
Isaiah 17:1, which says, "Behold, Damascus is taken away from being a city, and
it shall be a ruinous heap." Given the state of circumstances, the world is far
closer to this prophetic fulfillment than it was before the UN report on Iran.
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